Analyzing the Spillover Effect of Regional Financial Center of Almaty

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Analyzing the Spillover Effect of Regional Financial Center of Almaty Establishing a Regional Financial Center in Almaty: Is it feasible? by Olga Nesterova A Masters Project submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Regional Planning in the Department of City and Regional Planning. Chapel Hill April 2007 Advisor Abstract The Regional Financial Center of Almaty (RFCA) is one of the Kazakhstan government’s premier projects aimed at diversifying the national economy and improving the country’s position in the global market. This research examines the feasibility of the RFCA. For a financial center to succeed, a number of conditions must exist. Successful growth of a financial center requires a healthy financial sector and a favorable investment climate. Based on an analysis of the existing circumstances in Kazakhstan and the structure of its economy, I argue that the RFCA creates opportunities for the domestic economy, but its functional feasibility is currently constrained by the limited scope of a variety of financial services available in Kazakhstan, the distorted structure of the economy and the poor performance of the industrial sector. This analysis shows that the financial center is not feasible at this point in time and requires a sequence of investments in other sectors of the economy to support its operations and growth. Otherwise, there is a risk that the establishment of the RFCA may redirect a bulk of national resources away from other vital industries, where these resources are more needed, solely into the financial sector. This exclusive investment may ultimately lead to the failure of the RFCA. 1 Table of Contents Introduction …………………………………………………………………………. 4 What is a financial center? …………………………………………………………… 5 Diversification though a financial center in Kazakhstan …………………………… 7 Problem ……………………………………………………………………………... 12 Statement of the problem …………………………………………………….……... 12 Methodology ………………………………………………………………………..... 13 Research design ……………………………………………………………………... 15 Part I: Financial Sector in Kazakhstan …………………….……………………... 17 Banks …………………………………………………………………………..……... 18 Non-bank financial institutions ……………………………………………………... 22 Insurance companies ……………………………………………………………... 22 Pension funds ……………………………………………………………………... 23 Capital market ……………………………………………………………….…... 25 Part II: Access to credit ……………………………………………….…………... 27 Demand for credit …………………………………………………….……………... 27 Supply of credit ……………………………………………………………………... 32 Part III: Dubai Financial Center as best practice ……………………………….. 35 Conditions for the Financial Center in Dubai ……………………………………….. 36 Conditions for the Financial Center in Kazakhstan …………………………………. 39 Conclusion ………………………………………………………………………….... 43 References ………………………………………………………………….………... 47 Appendix ………………………………………………………….………………... 54 2 Acknowledgements I would like to thank the Rotary Foundation for the opportunity to study at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. UNC-Chapel Hill and the Department of City and Regional Planning in particular, gave me a comprehensive exposure to my field of interest and was an excellent place for furthering my education. I would like to thank my academic advisor, Meenu Tewari, at the Department of City and Regional Planning. She was extremely helpful and supportive of my idea to study the financial center in Kazakhstan. There are no words to express my gratitude to her for reading numerous unstructured drafts of my paper written with my poor English that even I struggled to understand. I would like to thank also Dr. Partick Conway for his ideas as to what would be interesting to look at. He gave me remarkable perspectives on my topic and encouraged critical thinking. Each time leaving his office, I ran to the library, motivated that I could do the research that seemed so unrealistic at the beginning. I would like to thank Stephen Moody from the Pragma Corporation for our e-mail communications. His expertise and knowledge of the financial sector in Kazakhstan helped me to find very clear and precise answers to so many complex questions that would have been impossible to answer otherwise. In particular, I appreciate the time he took to write his own opinion on each question in my list. It was priceless for my research. I would like to thank Dr. Charles Becker from the Department of Economics at Duke University. I appreciated our discussions on Kazakhstan that brought back many good memories. Finally, I thank my host counselor Jim Glover for his invaluable help with editing my paper. 3 Introduction The establishment of a Regional Financial Center of Almaty (RFCA) has been cited by the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan Mr. Nursultan Nazarbayev as an important milestone in the entry of Kazakhstan into the world economy and as a foundation for the future success of the country.1 A financial center is one of many efforts to improve the environment for business and entrepreneurship development, which is the main goal of the government of the Republic of Kazakhstan.2 The government anticipates that the financial center, through infusion of liquidity into domestic security market will help to attract the best global technologies, improve the quality of retail services, enhance an investment culture in the people of Kazakhstan and, most importantly, create structural reforms in the industrial sector of the national economy. Finally, the government expects the financial center to be an important tool for providing macroeconomic stability.3 However, little has been written about the circumstances under which such a center might be developed in Kazakhstan and the actual conditions required for the viable functioning of a regional financial center in order to achieve the goals set by the government. This study provides an analysis of the characteristics and settings under which a successful financial center may take root in Kazakhstan. The study does so by: a) analyzing the depth of the financial sector in Kazakhstan; b) estimating the demand for credit by the rest of the national economy; and, finally c) benchmarking Almaty’s efforts to build a Regional Financial Center with the successful 1 See the full text of Address by the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan Mr. Nursultan Nazarbayev to the People of Kazakhstan (2006) at: http://kazakhstan.embassy.lt 2 Declared by the government of Kazakhstan on 24 November 2005. Retrieved from http://www.government.kz/ru/text_public.asp?ID=131 3 Ibid. 4 international initiatives in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The goal of the study is to provide a better understanding of the feasibility of a regional financial center in Kazakhstan as well as general insights into the conditions under which a financial center can become an efficient tool for the region’s economic development. What is a financial center? To appreciate the decision to create a financial center, one must have an understanding of what a financial center is. According to broad definitions in the economic literature, a financial center is a spatial hub of a network of established financial institutions and efficient markets offering an array of financial services, and consequently, serving as an intermediary between foreign and domestic customers (Tan, 1978). Moreover, a financial center can generate strong indirect impacts on economic growth, employment, tax revenue, construction and tourism. The key attributes that identify a financial center are mechanisms for hosting markets for various forms of capital and insurance and being a center for a stock exchange, which provides the means by which the market prices of stocks can be fairly established and circulated to clients (Schenk, 2001). In addition to these common financial characteristics, industrial players are expected to be active participants both in present and potential dealings of the financial center. In line with the general definition, Richard Roberts describes four types of financial centers: 1) domestic financial centers that are aimed at meeting the demands of domestic customers; 2) regional financial centers that reach outside of national borders to meet a particular economic region’s demand for financial services; 3) offshore financial 5 center, which offer to its participants a special tax and regulatory regime to reduce the cost of offshore transactions; 4) international financial centers that offer services to global clients (Holtfrerich, 1999). Regional and international financial centers get the most attention nowadays given their potential contribution to the economic sector and regional competitiveness. Historically, these types of financial centers tend to grow out of the commercial activity of the country where the center is located. At the same time, politicians support them by contributing to the overall business environment, in particular by providing regulatory framework and institutional infrastructure under which they would operate (Schenk, 2001). For instance, in London, New York and Honk Kong there was already an ongoing agglomeration of services and infrastructure. Consequently, these cities developed strong financial sectors, which were based on international trade that became the foundation for the emergence of financial centers. However, financial centers in most emerging countries, such as Singapore and Dubai, did not develop gradually or organically. They were the outcome of more deliberate policy undertakings. The governments realized that a vibrant financial and banking sector could make significant contributions
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